Orbital occupancy and the periodic table

How electron configuration rules determine the shape of the periodic table

The principal quantum number n
of an orbital controls the average
distance of the electron from the nucleus when it occupies that orbital. Thus
the vertical scale on the illustration below corresponds to increasing (less negative)
potential energy as you go up the page. In multi-electron atoms, repulsion between
electrons causes some splitting of the orbitals having the same value of n but
different shapes (different values of l ) into different energies
as shown.

The pattern of this splitting is
such that d orbitals having a principle quantum number of n have energies in
the same range as the s and p orbitals belonging to the next lower value of
n, or n-1. This complicates the simple picture of electron "shells"
that is straightforward for s- and p orbitals of n=1 through n=3, and it profoundly
affects the organization of the periodic table.

>With f orbitals, things get even
more mixed up! Because of the energetic similarity of s, d and f orbitals having
different values of n, the actual electron configuration of an atom whose highest
occupied orbital is in this region may change with its chemical environment.
The configurations given in tables generally refer to the isolated, gaseous
atoms, and may not be representative of what occurs under more commonly encountered
conditions.

Remember that each little box in this diagram (which encompasses n-values 1 to 7) represents a single orbital—
a "state" of existence of an electron in an atom, characterized by
a certain energy and shape. The shape describes how the probability of finding
the electron at any location varies with radius and angle around the nucleus.

In the above diagram, the boxes refer
to elements and not to orbitals directly. For example, the oxygen atom, which
contains four electrons in 2p orbitals, is placed in the fourth box in the 2p group. If you think about it, this table provides a beautiful view of how the
arrangement of the periodic table is a direct consequence of the number of orbitals
of each type and their relative energies.

Now look at the representation of the first three rows of the periodic table shown below.

Electron configurations of the first
eighteen elements are
shown here along with the Lewis electron-dot formulas and valence shell occupancies.
Note especially the following points:

Orbitals fill "from the bottom
up" and they occupy separate orbitals (spin unpaired) before pairing
up. The latter effect is known as Hund's rule, and it is a consequence of
the smaller degree of repulsion between electrons when they can occupy separate
orbitals which have different orientations in space.

The up- and down-arrows represent
the two possible orientations of the magnetic moment of the electron (misleadingly
known as electron "spin"), or more precisely, the two possible values
of the spin quantum number. "Up" and "down" in this context
have no absolute meaning and are merely for convenience in notation. Atoms
possessing unpaired electrons act as tiny magnets and are said to be paramagnetic.

The electron dot formulas are
no more than bookeeping conveniences for counting valence shell electrons;
the placement of the dots around the symbol of the element has no significance.